Canada's Supreme Court strike down the country's prostitution laws as unconstitutional.
"In a unanimous decision, the high court ruled that all three prostitution-related prohibitions — against keeping a brothel, living on the avails of prostitution and street soliciting — are violations of the constitutional guarantee to life, liberty and security of the person."
Parliament has been given a year to produce new legislation, so the offenses will remain in the Criminal Code for one more year.
(Okay, technically my subject line is incorrect; the laws are not "off the books" just yet. But they will be.)
Thoughts?
"In a unanimous decision, the high court ruled that all three prostitution-related prohibitions — against keeping a brothel, living on the avails of prostitution and street soliciting — are violations of the constitutional guarantee to life, liberty and security of the person."
Parliament has been given a year to produce new legislation, so the offenses will remain in the Criminal Code for one more year.
(Okay, technically my subject line is incorrect; the laws are not "off the books" just yet. But they will be.)
Thoughts?


Seriously, if I understand my own country's legal and political system correctly, the Supreme Court is THE top authority in the land. They have quashed these laws; thus lawmakers literally cannot just bring back the same old laws under different wording.
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